Kolloquium am 15.07.2002
Complexity and Information Deficiences of Learned Knowledge Representations (Preliminary Results)
Prof. John Case
(University of Delaware)
For this talk we represent knowledge simply as computer program. A
program for a function f represents knowledge of how to compute
f - and it may contain additional information, perhaps
implicit and needing to be extracted.
Our setting is Gold-style computational learning theory in which
all the data points from the graph of a function f are
successively fed into an algorithmic learning device, and that
device outputs a corresponding sequence of computer programs -
in the "hope" those output programs will converge to a program
or programs which successfully compute f.
Investigated are some surprising and delicate tradeoffs between
the generality of an algorithmic learning device and the
quality of the successful programs it converges to.
Two classes of results are presented.
There are results to the effect that, with small increases in
generality of the learning device, the computational complexity of
some successfully learned programs is provably unalterably
suboptimal.
Importantly, there are also results in which the complexity of
successfully learned programs is optimal and the learning
device is quite general, but some of those optimal, learned
programs are provably unalterably information deficient - in
fact, deficient as to safe, algorithmic extractability of even the
fact that they are approximately optimal. For these results, the
safe, algorithmic methods of information extraction will be by
proofs in arbitrary, true, recursively axiomatizable extensions of
Peano Arithmetic.
This is joint work with Keh-Jian Chen, James Royer, and Sanjay
Jain.
Termin : | Montag, 15.07.2002, 17.15 Uhr |
---|---|
Raum : | Gebäude 46, Raum 280 |